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London's FTSE 100 Inches Lower as Middle East Concerns Weigh

July 1 (Reuters) - The UK's blue-chip FTSE 100 slipped on Wednesday, with healthcare and energy shares leading declines, as investors monitored the ​latest setback in U.S.-Iran talks.

The internationally focused FTSE 100 index closed down 0.2%, while ‌the mid-cap FTSE 250 jumped 1.4% to a one-week high.

  • Iran said on Tuesday it would not meet top U.S. envoys, following an outbreak of hostilities that clouded the prospects of a peace agreement.

  • Healthcare ​shares dropped 1.6%, weighing on the blue-chip index, with ​heavyweights AstraZeneca and GSK down 1.7% and 2.5% respectively.

  • Oil ⁠and gas shares also weighed, with Shell and BP ​dropping over 2% each on declining oil prices.

  • Precious metal mining shares rose 3.3%, keeping ​losses in check.

  • Aerospace and defence shares extended gains from the prior session when Prime Minister Keir Starmer pledged an extra £15 billion ($20 billion) of spending on ​defence. Babcock, BAE Systems and Rolls-Royce rose between 1.1% and 5.2%.

  • PMI data ​showed that Britain's manufacturing activity cooled in June despite a boost from stockpiling ‌ahead ⁠of price hikes and supply chain disruption worries.

  • Among individual movers, AB Foods dropped 3.1% after the Primark owner said it expects annual profit to be below last year's.

  • Greggs fell 3% and ​was the top ​laggard on ⁠the mid-cap index after the UK's biggest fast-food chain said its long-time CFO Richard Hutton would step down.

  • National Grid said ​it would invest $1.75 billion for a 35% stake ​in ⁠Joulent, a U.S. energy platform developing power infrastructure for data centres. Shares were down 3%.

  • Both the FTSE 100 and FTSE 250 ⁠notched quarterly ​gains. The mid-cap index posted its biggest quarterly ​rise in five quarters, while the blue-chip index ended higher in 11 of ​the last 12 months.

Reporting by Twesha Dikshit; Editing by Shreya Biswas

Source: Reuters


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